OPINION
¶ 1 Appellant Daniel Heriberto Rivera was convicted after a jury trial of driving while under the influence of an intoxicant (DUI) with a minor present; aggravated driving with a blood alcohol concentration of .10 or greater with a suspended, revoked, or restricted license; aggravated driving with a blood alcohol concentration of .10 or greater with two or more prior DUI convictions; and two counts of endangerment.
1
The trial court suspended imposition of sentence and placed Rivera on concurrent, three-year terms of probation for each conviction. On appeal, he challenges the three DUI-based convictions, contending the state violated his due process rights by trying him both on the theory that he had been the driver and on the alternative theory that he had been a passenger in temporary but actual control of
I.
¶
2
The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to supporting the verdicts,
State v. Nihiser,
¶ 3 One of the responding officers relayed a condensed version of the foregoing evidence to the grand jury on April 13, 2001. Although the evidence presented to the grand jury identified Rivera as being the driver, the pertinent counts of the indictment alleged that he “drove or was in actual physical control of [the] vehicle” (emphasis added). This language mirrored the DUI statute on which those charges were based, A.R.S. § 28-1381(A), which provides, “It is unlawful for a person to drive or he in actual physical control of a vehicle in this state under any of the following circumstances ____” (Emphasis added).
¶ 4 Subsequently, in a letter he apparently received on July 16, Rivera’s counsel learned that E. was claiming that she, not Rivera, had been driving the ear at the time of the incident. 2 Based on that letter, counsel filed a motion dated August 10 to dismiss the case for lack of probable cause to arrest Rivera. The trial court denied the motion after a hearing on August 27 at which E. testified that she had been driving and that Rivera had caused the accident by grabbing the steering wheel.
¶ 5 Anticipating a discrepancy in trial testimony over who had been driving, the state interviewed A. for the first time on the afternoon of August 29, the day before trial, and learned that she, too, would testify that E. had been driving, rather than Rivera. On August 30, as trial was about to begin, the state announced that it was proceeding on two alternative theories: either that Rivera had been the driver or that he had been in actual physical control when his actions as a passenger caused the accident. Rivera moved on due process grounds to preclude any theory of prosecution not presented to the grand jury. The trial court denied the motion.
¶ 6 At trial, both E. and A. testified that E. had been driving when they left the bowling alley; that, after arguing with E., Rivera had ordered her to pull over; and that Rivera had grabbed the steering wheel just before the accident. Their testimony was inconsistent with that of the civilian witness who had stopped to assist, who reported that E. had denied being the driver, and of Deputy Kry-gier, who testified that E. had twice told him that Rivera had been driving. The state argued to the jury that it could find Rivera guilty on the theory that he had been the driver or, if it believed E. had been driving, it could find Rivera guilty on the theory of actual physical control. The jury returned a unanimous verdict of guilty on all counts, but the form of verdict did not reveal whether the jurors had determined who had been behind the wheel.
II.
¶7 Rivera argues his due process rights under the federal and state constitutions
¶ 8 It is axiomatic that “[cjonviction upon a charge not made would be sheer denial of due process.”
DeJonge v. Oregon,
¶ 9 As previously stated, § 28-1381(A) provides: “It is unlawful for a person to drive or be in actual physical control of a vehicle in this state under any of the following circumstances ____” The phrase “actual physical control” has never been defined in Arizona’s DUI statutes,
State v. Dawley,
¶ 10 By speaking in
Dawley
of driving and actual physical control as alternative “theories] of culpability,” we did not mean to suggest that each was an independent crime.
Dawley,
¶ 11 Of course, a person who drives a vehicle actually physically controls it; driving is a subset of actual physical control.
See Brown,
III.
¶ 12 Due process requires that a defendant be given “ ‘notice of the specific charge, and a chance to be heard in a trial of the issues raised by that charge.’ ”
State v. Blakley,
¶ 13 Here, after hearing evidence that E. had said Rivera was driving, the grand jury indicted him on three, DUI-based charges, each citing § 28-1381 and accusing him of having been driving or in actual physical control. At trial, the state presented evidence that E. had initially identified Rivera as the driver, as well as the testimony of E. and A. that Rivera had been a passenger but had taken actual physical control when he grabbed the steering wheel from the passenger seat and caused the car to crash. Although E.’s and A.’s alternate version of the facts had only come to light after the grand jury hearing, Rivera had sufficient notice of the latter theory. Counsel had been aware at least twenty days before trial that E. was claiming she had been the driver, he had been aware at least three days before trial that the state would be pursuing an alternative theory of actual physical confrol, and he had been informed the day before trial that A. would testify consistently with E.
¶ 14 We find this case distinguishable from Rivera’s primary authorities,
State v. Martin,
¶ 15 In Martin, the indictment charged the defendant and a codefendant with selling narcotics to a third person. The prosecution’s theory of the case shifted at trial to reflect the evidence, which showed only that the two defendants had engaged in narcotics transactions with each other. Our supreme court reversed, finding the defendant had not received adequate notice of this construction of the indictment, which he could not have foreseen. Martin. Here, in contrast, Rivera had ample notice that A. and E. planned to testify that E. had been driving and that the state would expand its theory of prosecution to include that scenario.
IV.
¶ 16 Finally, we reject Rivera’s suggestion that the behavior ascribed to him by A. and E. did not constitute actual physical control for the purposes of Arizona’s DUI statutes. His argument is based in large part on the “actual physical control” jury instruction we articulated in
Dawley:
that the defendant there “was in ‘actual physical control’ of the vehicle if, based on the totality of the circumstances shown by the evidence, his potential use of the vehicle presented a real danger to himself or others.”
Dawley,
¶ 17 We affirm the judgments of conviction and the probationary terms imposed.
Notes
. The statute was later amended to reduce the legal blood alcohol concentration to under .08. A.R.S. § 1381(A)(2); 2001 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 95, § 5.
. The record is conflicting as to whether defense counsel received the letter on July 16 or whether the letter was dated July 16 and he learned of it sometime before August 10.
. At issue in Dawley was a jmy instruction patterned on Zavala and Love; Dawley presented a previously unconsidered fact pattern and illustrated the pitfalls of defining actual physical control based on case law arising from different facts. Dawley.
. Under other hypothetical situations, such as that suggested by the state below in closing argument — a passenger steering a moving car consensually while the driver changes a sweater— the distinction between driving and actual physical control would be even more blurred.
